Celestial hemisphere:  Southern  ·  Constellation: Fornax (For)  ·  Contains:  NGC 1097

Image of the day 04/26/2018

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
NGC 1097 - Optical Jets, Terry Robison
NGC 1097 - Optical Jets
Powered byPixInsight

NGC 1097 - Optical Jets

Image of the day 04/26/2018

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
NGC 1097 - Optical Jets, Terry Robison
NGC 1097 - Optical Jets
Powered byPixInsight

NGC 1097 - Optical Jets

Equipment

Loading...

Acquisition details

Loading...

Description

NGC 1097 can be found in the constellation of Fornax, and is classified as a SBbc, barred spiral galaxy. It is about 45 million light years away. It was discovered by William Herschel on the 9th of October 1790.

It’s a fantastic galaxy to look at. It’s a galaxy that has a lot going on. Visually, you can see the distortions and tidal debris that have resulted by the interaction with the companion galaxy NGC 1097A. Personally, the most interesting thing are the optical jets that show up in deep exposures.

Like all nice galaxies, it has a supermassive black hole at its centre. The mass has been calculated to be 140 million times the mass of our sun

Object Details

NGC 1097, Arp 77

Constellation: Fornax, Galaxy type: SBbc (barred spiral)

Size: 9.3’ x 6.2’

Recession Velocity: 1,284 km/sec

Image Details:

Center (RA, hms): 02h 46m 26.416s

Center (Dec, dms): -30° 16' 14.288"

Field of View: 34.1 x 26.9 arcmin

Radius: 0.362 deg

Pixel scale: 0.8 arcsec/pixel

Orientation: Up is 294 degrees E of N

Instruments:

10 Inch RCOS fl 9.1

Astro Physics AP-900 Mount

SBIG STL 11000m

FLI Filter Wheel

Astrodon Lum, Red, Green, Blue Filters

Baader Planetarium H-alpha 7nm Narrowband-Filter

Exposure Details:

36 X 900 Bin 1X1 Lum

12 X 450 Bin 2X2 Red

12 X 450 Bin 2X2 Green

12 X 450 Bin 2X2 Blue

19 X 1200 Bin 1X1 Ha

Location

Australia, Central Victoria

Comments